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title

/tahyt-l/US // ˈtaɪt l //UK // (ˈtaɪtəl) //

职称,标题,名称,题目

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the distinguishing name of a book, poem, picture, piece of music, or the like.
    • : a descriptive heading or caption, as of a chapter, section, or other part of a book.
    • : title page.
    • : a descriptive or distinctive appellation, especially one belonging to a person by right of rank, office, attainment, etc.: the title of Lord Mayor.
    • : Sports. the championship: He won the title three years in a row.
    • : an established or recognized right to something.
    • : a ground or basis for a claim.
    • : anything that provides a ground or basis for a claim.
    • : Law. legal right to the possession of property, especially real property.the ground or evidence of such right.the instrument constituting evidence of such right.a unity combining all of the requisites to complete legal ownership.a division of a statute, lawbook, etc., especially one larger than an article or section. the designation of one's basis for judicial relief; the cause of action sued upon, as a contract or tort.
    • : Ecclesiastical. a fixed sphere of work and source of income, required as a condition of ordination.any of certain Roman Catholic churches in Rome, the nominal incumbents of which are cardinals.
    • : Usually titles. Movies, Television. a subtitle in the viewer's own language: an Italian movie with English titles.any written matter inserted into the film or program, especially the list of actors, technicians, writers, etc., contributing to it; credits.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of or relating to a title: the title story in a collection.
    • : that decides a title: a title bout.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    ti·tled, ti·tling.

    • : to furnish with a title; designate by an appellation; entitle.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Simply put, teams like the 2019-20 Heat — with limited playoff experience and inordinate depth — aren’t supposed to vie for NBA titles.

  • The House inquiry began after the NLRB’s first attempt to roll back the Obama-era expansion of the joint-employer rule, in a 2017 decision titled Hy-Brand Industrial Contractors.

  • For their troubles, they’ll get the Phoenix Mercury, who are riding the amazing twin backcourt performances of Skylar Diggins-Smith and Diana Taurasi into serious title contention.

  • The title and meta description tags are what users see in search results – write them like a keyword-rich promo.

  • One of the simplest ways is to mention it one only in the meta-title, meta-description, and URL too.

  • Clickbait title notwithstanding, Bend Over and Take It Like a Prisoner!

  • But the title of Best Death definitely belongs to Bob Stookey, who got bitten by a zombie then captured by cannibals.

  • I guess we know how Bacchus kept his title as the god of wine and intoxication.

  • Enforcement of U.S Code, Title VII, Chapter 25A “Export Standards for Grapes and Plums” remains fully funded, thank goodness.

  • “Firestorms Will Rain on the Headquarters of War,” the title threatened.

  • The old earl's property, the source of his wealth, as from his title the reader will have shrewdly guessed, was in collieries.

  • He called upon the Order to show their title-deeds, but was met with a contemptuous refusal.

  • It may be noted in passing that in the three miracles in Matthew of exorcising a blinding demon the title “Son of David” is used.

  • With some difficulty Jos explained his mother's disclaimer of the title of Senora, and the choice of names she offered to Ramona.

  • That title of Castile might become the cherished ideal in the Philippines if it were valued as I desire.

title - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary